in V pwq,,p ,...-.- 0 Gaaldian t "ui riinu AA-on nlul in. IA: De-' rum !!lId ttery Inch Au wrtnuil It 1-3 Von" W9"- ;.”.,,,uw.,.p r n 1 in III linuitiwn Cnmslau MA at King xi IL. Tannin Iuuucul lllllkr :.u .l...i-H: lune: mun "HA 5...”... Punk)-llrf AA-J(.rui:iAl AI.-uuu Flank Hillel. usmim . ..u.. i...t. tum l'unti.xrtrtA AAAIIIIIAIIA Mmiu-.i ul lit: tinunlian PI-in M... V. xi.-in Hllllt-1U of lltfllllllllll u...,... ...i...- .. min-mrrutw M-tr-:i.l-t -H" W'"”"" A”.,.,,,,”,. " ,U..,..i.i... ti.lI In an Put ulttco ltetllrlllvtklll than i. t,...s. tittaii-titziuuu -itvvv-rmtr Dill" 1'" " rissnteu -it I'll HM Ulflll Pumorel II ..-MIPIPC nin- 'l u 3--no nrt A-mun E-.(,;."i - iwm-t-1.-ii.u'. MHZ lt. Irvin I -.-.. . . ---- - p Not In Vain it t... .lt' .'-l lllllt-v tlittittill in Ell"? ltilli lit.) l-iitrill-ttlll.lll ttutxini ' "will will i i- 'r L""”lV ill” H h'” , l.,,-,. .-t ttitll lllll -not ill;-"ill i flmt ....t t.' .i-on vi ” :Ht"l llltll ' ('UlllP Atwl tint... I. it zlillllllll lwlit'l i may will or llte will tltnizs p-'i'- I. W,. p.,,t Hp-.t--. l ti .- lltttt';;iii:tit it.t- .....t ll -t -- at oitiuv'--or- 4' 1 t.,..;.. .o....-.-.- 2--out tutti Wl"t' l to tho nit-Wt ltw lhigv lli-lVP striitiivtl the ' '”llrllllW'l",l 01' it? it"?- i,.,. ,.;.. ,.--.5 .- it...-tl it for ull.il :1 l. .lll llll -' Wt ill. Jtllfl Ylllltillh "h ;,...it no llls' llllltl.Illlt'lllEll liunt.tu ft-cc-t'.t-ti” r”--.--ll. :u the liglll M M... ., l-.-..t..-itti-3 lll lliiti':.:it-y. ll" ....li ..;. ...-t-: ti.-i tl'l lll .iui Ntlllil i that t--ii.tlii. ltvn -till t'tilllllillP lit hold on in the myth that (lomnuin- lgyn 15 met miiitlinr sot-i;il and Phill- lt-al 3-lhlI'lll..xtlIllxlllQ lo lrnprow tim Atantl;-irrl: nil in Int; aivitiilg the uni ltlk masses, Nrtr van anyone ll ho ix frot- to exprptt his feelings pretotirl any longer that the Ilniirt l'tunn l': ritz- ln pt-at eltlllj- n ot 0...;-rt ,-.. p .p1.t ll ttli l2t7'liltllF'- "'- political concepts. The blood of tens of thousands of brave. lllii'lE3l'laliS And the cries of those who h.'-we l-ovri put hark into the lIl'lx'llll liouw of Alavery give. the lie to all such pro- tensions. Already, report: from main" roun- trles u hen: the tiornttlunisl Flirt) is recognized as a legal ot't:'.miz.tttoti toll of the disillusionment that has opened the eyes of its support-rs to the plain truth that tins i'mo;ilnd on the streets of Budapest and in tho villages and crossroads of lllJllEIi'-ll'y. In Italy. which tip to the present has had the tttrongest Communist Party outstrip the Soviet l7nion, lum- lllllt"ll (tn l-ll'ril'P in their registration cards daily. The Alamo thing in happening in France jrlfl nthor I-Itimpmn rutintries where the parti is i'opt't'smllttd in p;irlI'ri- mcnt, ululn in Rrilain the l'lt'Hd of the party in reported to have de- nounced ”thti harharotis arts" of the Rt:-start lnxarlnr: of llLin;;'.iry. Tliose iilio ftlt'fl in Ilt"lN1tllll',; tlu:ir rights as human beings died in A cause that ll theirs And ours and which history uill record in bright letters. As for those on ulioni, after A few days of freedom. the yoke of cruelty has Again fallen. nothing can restore their peace of mind or miti- gate the anguish they endure. Flut in the FQPPFCIIR1-lflllG that are takuu; place in many lands-yes. and per- haps inside the Soviet fortress itself -there is at least it hope that their heroic sufferings will not have he-on it rain. A Little Light At last. a little llzht has hr-en shed on the aims and purposes of thc United Nations Police Force for the Mlddle East. In talking to reporters External Affairs Minister Pr-arson Itntecl that the (low-rntnont. is Anxious get the (taiiadititi Hngent, on its journt-y As soon as possible "in order tn prevent inter- vention in the area by Any other power." Wltiln the minister did not Identify the "other power" it seems Alear that he was referring to Russia which, According to reports. is send- hg troom and planes and gum into Ute Area at great. speed. Assuming thlt within A few days the U.N. Dot-co will he in Egypt, it in reason- Iblo Ito infer from Mr. Pearson's Imamut that it win be authorized ' ' prevuit "Baden intervention." in tutti. drnds of party nienthors are turning p been over I long period of time. But. perhaps in the event of the falluri of moral suaslon to accomplish the sevniingly impossible, it is intended that tho fort-e shall use harsher tn.-thods ;t-;;tinst Riissian interven- tion, if and nhrn it is set in motion. 'l'li.tt uuuld mt-an war or militant pull:-u nliatevcr official tttntr ttitx hr zlivti to it. But, surely on now -t't'itiii.-.-ly lwllcvcs that a small rtIlt'P or porhaptz ltl.tll'tll men drawn frtutl as tnany as fill or 40 countries. ;ii't ion or mi.-it uttlt us nun niililary-training nit-tltml. and only titcaigrely equipped. mtiltl lunrlrr A large and well equip- lii--ian force of perhaps 10 or 1? tint.-ions from doing anything it. ll.lllltltl in div, e.-perially in l'lPW of tho rtnnount-cmrtil. that British And l-'rt-tit-h lOl't'OS now in the IF?! Will not he pt-rmitied to have A hand in run at-tton that ought ensue. it seems -tiugitst that in such nit.-iitttxl,itit'tN, allfl they El"? ll)' I'll! tniltkolv, the U. N. Police l'llll'I3 until-l serve as cannon fodder .t-ll -it-lltitip ntnre. l..'litlr lht- IKX. ltn'i:c is intctirlvrl lit lif' a liglttiiig ftu'i'e, or it. isn't. ll itotl iv-i--ott;ilile ill llltllilld .I t-. and shoulrl the occasion for twill...-; Rllxv, sittvlv no one would i that ll is atlotiuale, tritlwvi t on l ll ally .ttt' lat llrally l0t' its me- lf lt im't, one wonders ttltat pI1i'pnK0 it can possibly servo. t'o1ilt'l not Ytlnyn--tlonoral Burns and tttilt-s look after the situation Jll-l as hell? Words Oi Warninq '4;--ail-ill: til the is-mlet llilicat to u...- it" kitl utuipniis R Q a l rt it the Wu-t. l'nitcd States General Alfred Urumitlier, it-tiring supreme rom- lii,iiitlttt' til V.-Vlltl lnr(tt".K' lll ltlllltnfllt, that l't"l?lllRiI0ll would itiitittptly follow and that this would be rllsnstlifills to the Soviet llnion. He added those significant uords: ”'ltlw only lluu: I lNll' is that in- Jllltll mus t-iitirisiii uisido the Atlantic Alliance mlzht mislead the Soviets alwtt oitr detcrmination to use our uflt-tixtiie l':ll);lPll), and that could hit 3 dixai.-'lcii'." It is in N3 lltipvft that tlicse uurds ixill he pondered very carefully both at Washington and Ottawa. There lms lwt-n far too much ”injudi(:ious rritit'i:;ni" by our own flaliinot min- isters of Britain's armed intervention in Egypt, from the Prime Minister and Foreiizn Affairs Minister down. Rut niorc important has born the failure of either the United States or the l'nited Nations to help Britain nhtain A just settlement with Egypt, 1 and thc mor:il tune of t-nnrlt-mnatinn tiliivli those it-sponsihle for this . failure liave adopted. This point. is made in A striking summary of the situation by the l.ondon correspond- ent of the Nriv York Times, which use republish in today's issue. EDIITORIAL NOTES -ltv F'ole.r- next line for brutal Soviet oppression? It would almost seem so from reports of large concentrations of Soviet. troops in and near Poland and East. Germany. w;ll'llIiIll, .t lvki W a r It it It the in The .l;lpa!IP.N'F out; hi to he in pretty good shape, economically. for the immcrllate future, The rice Prop this year amounted to almost 400 million bushels, the third largest on record. O O 0 As the slim. crisis develops. we kt-vp uondcrin: uliat our American neighbors would do if Canada. emu- lating Folnnel Nasser, decided to "nationalize" the Arctic DEW Lim- stations htiilt on Canadian territory by the US. govemment for the greater safety of the American Re- publicl l-'ornie.r President Truman says that now thatlthe election in over he will spend his time Attending to personal bustneas which includes supervision of the building of the .TrumAn Library which will hold the official papers of his Piuldcmy. Perhaps not AA exciting ll elec- tioneerlng but eerlA.lnly more valu- able to posterity. mAnybuIieenhruuAhttoAcloIeby forum legislation lctltll. For the a 5-MilW.b TET or STRENGTH llitzllllfltisis in Britain Drew Mlddletmi In the New York Times Pm the nut I.ti tr-gi;. thy pltett of llritlsli liilriwittinn in ltlslvl" on the national ii.-ychology. politic- Al atilhattons and even the dcvrl- Itnment of Bi lit-ll sot irlv will he llI('l'llaklllgly appdrtsnl R-ll lllf utarttni: point or t-rltrt-lion this net-l--end is llir- tail that .ur uwituis i't'.'t-nits tiirlixilttials and ormaiitzationn bclir-ut that Britain hag xillferrvl A severe dr-fr-at in the tltrlrle Eu-:I and lhal her davs of nttlttlrx, pnlttiral and ftlpl(Illlai- ll Illllllrllfir lll that men are draw- in: In a r-low Stripped nf tlir tiqtpplnpp of par- tisan rlobale. ulial liappcnrd was lhll Rrltain and Franre gave an uttmmuni to tjgypt and Israel to slnii lighting or arrrpt British and I-lrenttt pnlttr arltttn alfm: the Suez (tanal The ultimatum extor- ed Rritairi and France attarlird - nnt with the hold. immediate stroke that might have TFHPTT the world will 5 fan nrrhfnnll but through A stearlv. nwlhodiral rtrorrss that mAPrl niorr to thr military trach- inigs of l-'tolti 'll.'tr-.hal Montgom- ery that in those of Napoleon Ronapartr Before the operation was fully develop:-rl the ftuhting was stopped and arrnncrnwntx in-nun in with- drau Ihn trnnps it uas as if in the l11ld(tP of an involved operation the Slll'2f'fifl had put down his ltniven at the sugzcsllon of I hit- iitandcr uho thought the operation wan A VYtIsl:IltP. Ill Al. OB.lF(lTll'l'IS Wlirro tlors ll'll.'- lrair Britain" Tlw nncltt-t" is urapitrrl in lhr British olttm-tix'tn Including those that an understood as well as those that were Announced Brit- ain and France took action to tialrl the Israeli-Ecwtian war. The uar r-ntlod p.'irlly llt'l'r'Jll.'-l' of Elritiali and l'.l't"7lf'lI interven- lion but also lwrniise of other raiisn Amon! thew uere II- rAel't- limited tactical ohiertives. the nosrlhltty of Russlna inter- i-enttun the rnnttnuin: rrltism lnv Britain: rlIi:r:l Atlanttr al- lies and (nmtnnnuralth frioorln and the obvii-it-. division of pub- lic opinion at home Freedom of passage through the Sun. Canal uas nnt won by the police Rltllnrt l-'l:htuiA did not lakr plare hrluPPn F-k'VPlIRnS nod lxraelt: alnn: or mrr the moat but Em-ptian block shins closed the canal more effertlvelv than any Amount of Akirmlshlng Along its banks. in stlflltlfli tho "IlIlflPV'ltI1nd" rather than the Announced goals of the tnlrrw-ntmn. Britain and Franre fitilcd Prcstdcnt Nassrr re- mains in power in (intro and Al- though A large proportion of his Russian equipment has been rap lured or drwtrnyrd. there in every reason to think it vttll hr replarv-d hr the Snvirt Union in the immod- iatr futiirr linlcss aizaivut All littl- torirnl evidence the United Na- tions is Able to impose A political settlement. the rnniuut of war in the Middle East have Viol been el- lminaled. PRESTIGE l.'.NmF,STORF3D Finally the restoration of British and French tore-llge. in the Middle llaut but not been Attained. The gnvmimenls at the Arab states in the mode test must. realm tliAt the imposing Armldl of ships. the hundreds of modern bombers and fighters. the tough paratrooper: and commando: were checked not by Egyptlm rnluance. wlilclt wm pitifnl. but by the inability of the Rritiillt and French Guvrl'lllTlEDtI to resist the rrittricm nf tbek friends or threats nt their enemies. Fun the West expert that in the Mme tut any attention will be - paid ttencotortli to lrltlslt of Irene! um-ulna? can in elttuitlmt be retrieved to A manner fAvorAble to Britain? An attirmatlve answer um be ntferd only if the WPIC. led by the I'M” States lcrcpti the reasoning II!- ltlnd the French-British interven- ahout the evident need to halt our war and Avoid A second or grtatri war in the Middle East. But its basiz was the ugly fart thAt the oil sunplirs on which Britain dcpcntls for her economic life are rndanuor ml by hosula Govt-rnmcnls lll thr- Ytltddle limit II I! not enough. the British are suing. for the United States to tin- dcmand this. As the leader of the Atlantir alliance it must provide nupnort for British and French in- tert-sts in the region to A i;rr.'ite.r rlrizrer, that it. was willing to do before lsmcl invaded Egypt. More- over. the United States must nnl only provide this support. she mint he won in do so in Cairo. Amman. Rnizlidad. Beirut and Damascus This in the only may. Britons Agree. that Britain's situation in tho llirldle East can be restored. NEW APPROACH URGED l'nlt-ss there is A solid Western approach to the Middle East. one that Bill encourage and guaran- ice a peace settlement. then the lltilisli expect. first. A drastic loss of influence for All the Western powers. and second And perhApA more Important. A slow erosion of their take in the oil field: of the region. Basically lht-tr police Ar- tinn was atmod at preventing this. Store the United Slnteii played A minor role in halting that Action. Flritnnn Are obvlotisly nrutely tn- torrctorl in what the United States will do in twin now, The British f'.overnment't: Action RlTltI'-f't'l nuhlir it-cling here in l'tFlE:hl.l that were almost unbeliev- able Among I politically mature people To separate the motivation scntimcnts is almost impossible But now that the rylventure has bt-rti ahatidoncd ll is lppi-lrfnt that there are some mAln currents of political lhoulllt. There in A large group. relying for its popular support upon parl- ft-t. lnternatlomlist And nonconfor- mttxt elements. which opposed tn- tervevitioti from the mitset The Labor uartv expressed this groupm feelings. but it would be an error to believe that it wu cnropnsed solely of Labor voters. From the outset It opposed military open- tinns, welcomed the cease-fire And an-. iuhilant at the withdrawal. its arnumrnts were based large.- lt- on moral grounds. But only the most naive can believe that the Labor pArtv'A Acceptnnce of the moralistic aigumi-tit wen unattend- ed by A driving thirst for polillcll power. Except for Aneurln Benn and Hugh Galtskolt no Socialist leaders have emerged from the parliamentary upron of the int two weeks with Any heightened i-st:-em in the eye: of their country- men. On the nnpostlr side was In other group. less articulate both in politics and In the forming of ' public opinion. convinced for A number nf rusons that interven- lion in Egypt. though polltlcnlly risky and basically an unsAtlAfac- tnry meant: in the modern world. wlk the only mean: by which the United Kingdom rnuid itecure its blutr interests in the Middle East ARIIIIMI-INT! PRO AND CON This gmup wu lAi-Aely Conser- vltlve in composition. its renun- lng wn based upon the lnrpotauu of the United Nations to impose A It. settlement in the int vulinnen CAIIAI II weeks this group will tine to and that metal uiustve political Attach. No on would be Aug-plead. them-0. if h ddeiidlng than- tntveit the of this pr- mulon. be non Cabinet ministers Advnnet the Aruind The Age Old Story Anti ue l-mm out All tblngu work together for good to them till! luv! mil. to them who Are the called nrcordlng to his purpose. OUR YESTERDAYS Ft-um The (iuudlnn lfllu TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (November 14. list) Tuo large hoals stumed into Hummerside Harbour yesterday morning almost at the same time and dot-krd one on each side of the Marine Wharf. The S. S. Astra and the S. S. Nvhan are from New York. The Astra Wlll load table- stocl-' potato:-s while the Nlvltaii utll load send potatoes for the, Po- tato Growers Association. "A" Compaiiv. F El H1ghlArid- -.rn hu been in training At thn Drill shed for the past ten days. It is understood that the training will continue for some ronutde - Able time yet The offflcers in r-barge Are: Major T. R- Rogers. Commandant; Li. W. W Myei-A, DC.M.. M M. Lt. C. J. Campbell. Li. W. W. Reid. TEN YEARS AGO (Nov:-mbcr I4. limit The P.El Fisheries Federation .Vrslerday Afternoon passed A reso- lution iuommending that the Do- minion Department of Fisheries make rnmpulttory the izradlng of All rannt-d fish "ext-t-pi canned lobster!" The meeting also pgg. left another resolution asking that fresh and frozen lobster meat be subject to inspection- .Tl1e P E l. Dependents Advisory fommtitrr of tlic Depcnden. Board nf Trustees which nperat. Ni under the Department of NA- ttnnal Defence held its flnAl meet-. ink At the Chnrlotlislown Hotel yen. terdny. The Board wu created to lfnnt PmH'genr.v Assistance to de- Dendents of members of the armed forces and operated Ihrnugh 31 regional committees in CAnAdA. v Medically Speaking I!IA.rnllN.ICIDea.I.I- MEDICINE KAI GONE FAB IN LAST IJUNDIID YIAII II the int hundred years. und- lul Advcnelu have buntho unt- cnt All AAv- made things I lot outer for everyone. Just no your: Ilo- in ms-A child born in the United State: I van. Today - '.:.".”..:":: ” "'t "' "'.'. 5' mil: the buillcal 10. C Onlutlou Annually wen ur- twutod without . except hr occuloul done of Alcohol 8 Almllu substances. We lied no X- ru or eloclrocArdi'ou-aph. Medl. clues were confined to A low lua- nnic ulu And Kmultlpllclly Al or Anlc extracts. O-dldlfl know About hormonal or vitamin. We've come A long way in the tut century. In fact. more rogresa has been nude in the fled .f medicine in this period than in the 2.856 yurl Ltut have elapsed when llu Arut Greek physician. Hippocrates. guicnlly lg conced- ed to have let the nltern for Western mcdlcine. HPECIFIC GEIMS It was Around 1864 that Lount Pasteur recorded definite proof that specific genus or bacteria caused decomposition And infer- tloul dleeauu. His principle of prophylaxis is now applied Ln many childhood diseases, including pol- lomyclitiu. Within 30 years. Icienttsts tiari lsolAted And identified the caus- " 0! ICPTOEY. typhoid fever. gonor- rhea. tetanus. dipttieria And other disease. Today we know the rausattir nr- K-'iHl5m of just About every inter. Ltous disease- Ilnce no B.C. A - dangerously close to being like the And Ill of LI! today knou (hr . importance of vitamins Yet it wnnlt until 1931 that llr lFdl'IlPd I the chemical structure of lltaruln l A We 1936 RAPID DEVELOPlllE.V'l' Durtnl the MA And ins up made npld developments in the via. min field. but we ltavenit -yet been Ihle to synthesize vitamin D suc- ccssfully. There's one more tnedit-al "1. Vince in the last century which we dont want to 0l'Pl'l0Ok. it wu About 1856 that Wllllm Rlchlrd lllnrner. A 30-year-old phat-mgcigi, first dipped his pills in syrup to give them a sugar coating And A plesanf taste How the children welcomed that! QUESTION AND ANSWER A. D.: Does vitamin B-12 Help certain cases of Arthritis" Answer. It has been found tliAt osteoarthritis is helped in going Ptrwns by large doses of vitAmln 3-13 Riven by injections. dlftnll synthesize it until AUTUMN ON THE COAST The osprey flew with young gum; tuna And let the current of cold air fling . A new ext-ilemt-nl An expectation Of the hawk muzratmn , . . familiar fishing place on shore . Tomorrow he'd target. ignore; He had A- rendezvous to keep. hr below Men watched him go . . . Men erecting A wind-break fence Before the great storms would .ommen .- Tn blow land on the nurtured gar- dens: Now all was ready. Braced And steady. --lrlinbt-tli Reeves Humplireys. tn the Christina Science Monitor. The MA)flMS '7' Wlbltr we In the rut .4 In the strongest: in print; in hm. "W I ltlbnlded mm ruin: the ful- Mtt Aloiii the llttlo IMO-hllll of me. FCC!- fnr "f71..1rist." and 1955 hp 1549 H'5,l"d and Pity. mourning Ind Admiratiori. these are our emot. r ill"-9 t-Oday: hatred for tho men And the systcm which did not hel- ltnle to shed new rivers of tnnoe. PM Hungarian blood to rcimpose l'3V0f.v: pity for the Soviet said. N". duped into thinking, they lw” tllhtlnn "Fascia-it.I" when ""'.V killed defenseless or nenrly defenseless men. women And children: mourning Antl Admiral. ion for the heroic Hunurln pen- nle who feared not. even dutli to strike for freedom, eve relAx out And gt. WALK W M run time! . to mu,...::. .., ....,:,',",,: wm mu up 3:3," ....”:......"'.!.".'."".?..1' -tr 2'..'l.”.Z'u'" U """' man. But uh can-A..of he '"j.' Tu", m .........."'7' '" .. :5 "”:...”" ”t-' '4' M” II will never built. In 3 gm ' -3 not turn. And at at Anna AAA .10 339.5 turn in ice he IIHVA any 710-15 10 .5 grunt! the drawn ll ' 760-15 371;) w." 5 MiL'Es from CENTRE of SAINT JOHN EL IELGRANO MOTEL St. Stephen Highway Route 1 Pli on 4-86 Large well furnished rooms Showers Qnafli tubs Central heating Q Single. double And sullen Brnkfut And dinner Radio And televlalon able Q Telephones in rooms OPEN YEAR ROUND Icommrcld Into: Avail- NOTES BY. THE WAY Th CAledAA.lAA Ioetollu ell make wlut they like of the revel- ation that certain Russian pen- Ant.A have lanai woavlnl Ind Wur- lu their own particular tutu- tor generations.-0ttAwA Jourul Aiciiuu liuellcl. who III: that "ll-OBI walls do not I" 9715011 inch: not iron turn I can. WOW lisvc blinked A bit. At the new ball in Brooklyn There the iron burl ug pglnted in putal shades to relieve their monotony. and tin- fovg iii. mgnul and Aplrllllll out- k of the inlnllll.--VlllC0llV0l' Sun In no Iecret. that Iobccu chew- ing is just. About A: lost An Art. or Amusement. ll nadlnl I10!” the subtitles of pre-talkie moviu. if you go into A cl;Ar Alon these L” , and .k for A how. the young lad; behind the counter will point to the gum display And Ask courteously. "Bubble, or silent?" ..Hlmlll0ll Spectator Farmers in Non Scott: AN! HA- mg i-Afleclor tap. on their cow'I horns so that they may be better identillod And so not shot in t-hi dur season. Reflector tAP0 ml! not. look like A deer but it is red l'l"ll-Ind hunters om-Ape.-Kingston liunte-1' don't always Wliig-Standard it the fire in Illbbert township lh(' nuiicr. Elgaard Gregcrscn. said he had tried without any auc- f'E5'- to get three pigs out of a pen In the root cellar under the gAng- uay In disgust. lie ave up and thought to himself they could lol- ly well my And burn. but its wu getting out. After the barn was burned to the ground the DIES walk- ed out of the open floor of the root cellar, unharmed-Scnloi1b News The Cnmtdian Prue report: from Paris that in all North Af- rir.. Moslems are nanung lhElI' babies "Nas.set” and VNIISBQTI" -- not ”Dull"s' or ' l5isenliowe.." Tliapk heavens for tliatt perhaps the mtnht ti! snmcllllnl more unnerving 20 gears hence than A Berber horseman n A med Ike ben Tewfik or John Foster iltn Fu- L circling the bounds of Sidl Rex- rgti or skirting Gauln. but it's hard to imagine.-Vancouver Pro- VII!!! 15 ounoAs- - 31.35 AA when A an IneAA't can what he uyl. othnn take him at his own vAluc. -St. Catharine Standard flu Icalllu-Ala Supreme Court has selected A plea of A toy”... nld convicbsd "gorilla" AlAyer tlui be on be hand to And "the liv- ing dutli" he endures in prison. The! may give the pro And Anti i:ApitAl punts? out folk something more to think About.-Bnutford Expocitor BUIID RESISTANCE TO WINTER COIDS wmt WAMPOLPS l XTRACT or con uvn couiouu (ANAD'S FAVOURITE FAMILY TONIC ASK YOUR MU FOR WAMPOLWI CT T0-M Y! ' i 527.35 YOU SAVI 517.35 WATCH FOR BARGAIN COACH FARES GOING DECEMBER ll-ll GOOD GOING 11338. O VII). From All Stations in MARITIMES MONTREAL-OTTTPAWA-TORONTO Return Faro from CHARLUTTBTOWN IEIUIN In my: to othvl or Toronto. l.lIlI'l'e 1 Ben to IIAACNAI. children Under 5 Tnvol Pi-so-I And Under 13. KAI! FAN. Ionlnr 150 Lb. lunn AllovAIoI NOV. 1. .l 331.65 YOU SAVE 520.05 340.25 YOU BAVI 325.50 FOOTBALL FANS! see GREY CUY FINAL. Dominion l"oot.bAll ('hAmplovulilp. TORONTO. SA'!'.. NOV. 14 CANADIAN NATIONAL hnvnlumllnhc-Nunrutuout Break Through That stuffy HEAD COLD FOG 0pf,g',,',”Xto59! when I bud-cold slum up your nose. innkeu bi-eAthing dldlcult. nothing works like Vick: .- VA-tro-nol None Drops to bring (it ' fut. soothing relief. A few drape -” ' up eAcb nostril As directed. L-X , 'l'hAt.'I Alll . . . Your nose open. You cm bi-eAthA Aglinl Won- l dorful relief. too. for mean or c M mvicits VA-TRO-NOI. N09! DROPI FOR Tlll WIATIIII T wntuin niuvnic MIKE TRACTION TIRES